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  • 23Aug

    Scientists on the Swiss-French border have made a machine called “The Collider,” of which the main function is to display the exact beginning of the Big Bang.  It is a very technical and complicated machine, but the basic gist of such an instrument is to replicate the conditions from which our existence, the whole universe, was created.  In it two particles run at high speeds through a vacuum to recreate the Big Bang (basically).  I have some problems with this because these scientists are working from materials that have already formed.  They are not starting from scratch (such as what the Big Bang apparently did).  The question for this week has to do with Hydrogen.  Hydrogen:  the building block of life.  Its simple structure is found in 90% of all matter.  It is the most prevalent element in the universe.  Hydrogen plays a big factor in our existence and also in the theory of how life began.  Without Hydrogen there can be nothing, and so naturally the scientists on the Swiss-French border are using Hydrogen to help explain how we got here.  Here is my problem:

    How was hydrogen created?

    It is impossible to prove a theory that the Hydrogen element can just pop up out of nothing (Hydrogen Genesis).  If in the beginning there was nothing, then still today there should be nothing.  You cannot simply create hydrogen when there is nothing else that exists.  All matter exists because something predicated its existence.  Creatio ex nihilo (creation out of nothing) is as impossible as the eye evolving into a working organ overnight (or millions of years for that matter).  The scientists working on “The Collider” are working with existing materials and intelligence…but the Big Bang wasn’t!  The answer then is that something must have predicated the existence of Hydrogen….that something points to God.